Breaking: Wholesale Power Prices Plunge – No Signal for New Wind and Solar Investment
Wholesale Electricity Prices Hit Record Lows, Killing Investment Incentives
Wholesale electricity prices have fallen to levels that cannot sustain existing generation—let alone support new wind and solar projects, industry analysts warned today. The persistent low prices are providing no investment signal for renewable developers, threatening the clean energy transition.

“The current wholesale market is essentially broken for new capacity,” said Dr. Emma Reeves, energy markets expert at the Global Energy Institute. “Prices are so low that they don’t even cover the operating costs of old plants, and they offer zero incentive for building new ones.”
Background: The Market Disconnect
Wholesale electricity prices are determined by the marginal cost of the last generator dispatched—often low-cost renewable sources like wind and solar during sunny, windy periods. This has driven prices sharply down, a trend that policymakers celebrated as a sign of cheap clean energy.
However, the same low prices now create a paradox: they accurately reflect the abundance of renewable energy but provide no revenue stream for new wind and solar projects that require long-term contracts to get financing. “The spot price is a mirage,” Reeves added. “It shows the future we want – cheap, clean power – but it’s a terrible signal for the very investments needed to get there.”
What This Means: Investment Freeze and Grid Risks
Without adequate price signals, developers are halting new renewable projects, which could delay the phase‑out of coal and gas plants. The lack of revenue also threatens the viability of existing assets, potentially leading to premature retirements without replacement capacity.
Energy analysts urge regulators to redesign market mechanisms – such as introducing capacity payments or fixed-price contracts – to ensure that low wholesale prices do not choke off the investment needed to meet climate targets. “If we don’t fix this, we’ll hit a wall,” said Michael Tran, director of power markets at Stratas Advisors. “The clean energy transition will stall.”

Key Numbers
- Wholesale prices have fallen by more than 50% in some regions over the past two years.
- New wind and solar projects now require a minimum of $30-40/MWh to break even; current spot prices often dip below $10/MWh.
- Over 10 GW of proposed renewable capacity has been delayed or canceled in the last quarter alone.
What Policymakers Can Do
- Introduce fixed-price contracts for difference to provide revenue certainty.
- Establish a reliability capacity market that pays generators for availability, not just energy delivered.
- Implement carbon pricing to reflect the true cost of fossil fuels and create a floor for clean power revenue.
“The spot mirage is real,” Reeves concluded. “We have to stop expecting low wholesale prices to guide investment. The market needs a redesign, and it needs it now.”
For more context on why low wholesale prices are problematic and what changes are being proposed, see the sections above.
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